There's a stretch most people hit somewhere in their twenties where the plan stops making sense. The degree doesn't lead anywhere obvious. The job is fine, or it isn't, and either way it doesn't feel like a life. Friends start pairing off, buying furniture, and talking about five-year plans, while everything else stays undecided. It isn't a crisis exactly—more a low, steady hum of not knowing what comes next, or whether you're behind everyone else or just moving at your own pace. Cinema has made a small genre out of this exact feeling. None of the films below solve it. What they do is get it right.
Frances Ha (2012)
Noah Baumbach's film follows a twenty-seven-year-old apprentice dancer in New York who loses her apartment, her best friend, and her sense of direction within the space of a year. She is broke and behind by any conventional measure, and the film refuses to treat that as tragic. It is closer to a record of someone muddling through, badly at times, until she finds a version of her life that actually belongs to her.
Lost in Translation (2003)
Sofia Coppola's film is usually remembered for its Tokyo hotel setting, but Scarlett Johansson plays a philosophy graduate who has just gotten married and has no idea what she's doing with her life. She has done everything she was supposed to do and still feels out of place inside it. The film gives that feeling a lot of quiet, unhurried space instead of rushing to explain it.
The Worst Person in the World (2021)
Joachim Trier's film follows Julie through her late twenties as she moves between medical school, psychology, photography, and a string of relationships without settling on any of them. Norwegian audiences read it as a generational portrait when it came out. It works because Julie isn't written as scattered for comic effect—she's written as someone actually testing out different lives to see which one holds.
Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara (2011)
Zoya Akhtar's film sends three friends on a trip through Spain before one of them gets married. Underneath the road-trip plot, each man is quietly confronting a life he backed into rather than chose—an engagement out of habit, a job picked out of fear, years spent avoiding an old loss. For readers looking for something closer to home, this is one of the few films on this list that takes the feeling seriously in a familiar setting.
Someone Great (2019)
A lighter film about a woman getting over a breakup that also cost her the future she'd been planning around someone else. It doesn't inflate the drama of heartbreak in your twenties, but it understands something real: losing a plan can feel a lot like losing your footing, at least for a while.
None of these films offer a way out. What they offer is company — proof that this particular kind of confusion, watching your own life from a slight distance and not knowing if you're behind or just early, has been common enough to become its own genre.